NEWSWIRE
Tim Montgomery gets five years in prison
Sprinter was once 'the world's fastest human.'
Disgraced former Olympic track star Tim Montgomery, once dubbed "the world's fastest man," was sentenced Friday to five years in prison for dealing heroin to an informant.
"I was blind -- I never had a job in my life," Montgomery told U.S. District Judge Jerome B. Friedman in Norfolk, Va. "I did the wrong thing."
"I was blind -- I never had a job in my life," Montgomery told U.S. District Judge Jerome B. Friedman in Norfolk, Va. "I did the wrong thing."
Montgomery, 33, will serve the five-year sentence after he completes a 46-month prison term for an unrelated conviction in New York.
Under an agreement with the government, he pleaded guilty in July to possession and distribution of more than 100 grams of heroin. He received the minimum term under federal sentencing guidelines.
Montgomery won an Olympic gold medal in the 400-meter relay at the 2000 Olympic Games and a silver in the same event four years earlier.
Under an agreement with the government, he pleaded guilty in July to possession and distribution of more than 100 grams of heroin. He received the minimum term under federal sentencing guidelines.
Montgomery won an Olympic gold medal in the 400-meter relay at the 2000 Olympic Games and a silver in the same event four years earlier.
A federal judge sentenced former elite cyclist Tammy Thomas to six months of home confinement for lying to a grand jury about her steroid use.
U.S. District Court Judge Susan Illston rejected a federal prosecutor's request that she be sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison, noting the ringleaders at the center of the BALCO doping investigation received four months in prison or less.
Thomas was the first person connected to the BALCO case to go to trial. She is appealing her conviction.
Jose Canseco was held for nearly 10 hours by immigration authorities after agents said they stopped the former baseball star with a fertility drug as he returned from Mexico, his lawyer said.
Canseco was detained at San Diego's San Ysidro border crossing Thursday after agents searched his vehicle and said they found human chorionic gonadotropin, which is illegal without a prescription, said his attorney, Gregory Emerson.
Emerson declined to say if Canseco had the drug, which is banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency for use in males. The drug helps restore production of testosterone lost in steroid users. Canseco was not charged with a crime.
Helio Castroneves can leave the country for an IndyCar event this month in Australia after a federal judge agreed to modify bail conditions on tax charges the driver is facing.
HORSE RACING
Trainer Dutrow gets favorable ruling
Kentucky racing officials plan to challenge a recommendation that there's insufficient evidence to suspend Big Brown's trainer, Rick Dutrow, for violating doping rules.
The order by hearing officer James Robke indicated the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission was unable to prove Dutrow's horse, Salute The Count, had an excessive amount of the drug Clenbuterol in his blood after finishing second May 2 in the Aegon Turf Sprint at Churchill Downs. That was one day before Big Brown won the Kentucky Derby.
Clenbuterol allows horses to breathe easier while exercising. Its use is legal at low levels.
MOTOR SPORTS
Kyle Busch wins in Nationwide Series
Kyle Busch cruised to a win in the Nationwide Series' Dollar General 300 at Concord, N.C.
U.S. District Court Judge Susan Illston rejected a federal prosecutor's request that she be sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison, noting the ringleaders at the center of the BALCO doping investigation received four months in prison or less.
Thomas was the first person connected to the BALCO case to go to trial. She is appealing her conviction.
Jose Canseco was held for nearly 10 hours by immigration authorities after agents said they stopped the former baseball star with a fertility drug as he returned from Mexico, his lawyer said.
Canseco was detained at San Diego's San Ysidro border crossing Thursday after agents searched his vehicle and said they found human chorionic gonadotropin, which is illegal without a prescription, said his attorney, Gregory Emerson.
Emerson declined to say if Canseco had the drug, which is banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency for use in males. The drug helps restore production of testosterone lost in steroid users. Canseco was not charged with a crime.
Helio Castroneves can leave the country for an IndyCar event this month in Australia after a federal judge agreed to modify bail conditions on tax charges the driver is facing.
HORSE RACING
Trainer Dutrow gets favorable ruling
Kentucky racing officials plan to challenge a recommendation that there's insufficient evidence to suspend Big Brown's trainer, Rick Dutrow, for violating doping rules.
The order by hearing officer James Robke indicated the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission was unable to prove Dutrow's horse, Salute The Count, had an excessive amount of the drug Clenbuterol in his blood after finishing second May 2 in the Aegon Turf Sprint at Churchill Downs. That was one day before Big Brown won the Kentucky Derby.
Clenbuterol allows horses to breathe easier while exercising. Its use is legal at low levels.
MOTOR SPORTS
Kyle Busch wins in Nationwide Series
Kyle Busch cruised to a win in the Nationwide Series' Dollar General 300 at Concord, N.C.
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